Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Thank you from me, also. I just received exciting (for me) Eranthis seed from SRGC seed exchange, I hope I get some seeds to germinate.
From Alan B : Rules are one thing but I was more interested in what the people who distribute these cultivars do.
From Robert: I'm somewhat vexed that when I offer, and label as such, a true breeding line, that the seed is not label as such in the seed list. It is very different from open pollinated non-isolated seed.
Right now I have Eranthis hyemalis and pinnatifida in flower.Last year I replanted pinnatifida in lattice pots in the garden, to be able to bring them in the green house to get a better pollination. Until now they have been planted directly in the garden. They flower well there but have only set seed one time in about 5 years.Poul
A question that a great many of us pose regarding lots of other plants too - snowdrops come to mind - and hellebores -and and and !
A general question :Is Eranthis hyemalis self fertil ?ThanksHans
Hans,My guess is that E. hyemalis is self fertile. They do not appear to be apomixis. If some clones come 100% true from seed, without apomixis, then they must be self fertile and a lot of inbreeding has gone on.
Is Eranthis hyemalis self fertil ?
Anyhow, some Eranthis come 100% true from seed (like Schwefelglanz', 'Hafod' and 'Moonlight')
Leena, there is still hope Two years ago I had successful germination of Eranthis hyemalis Aurantica from the SRGC seed exchange. I achieved about 50% germination the first year and I didn't soak the seeds. The pots were placed in an unprotected outdoor seed frame where they got lots of rain.
Don't you think we all get carried away by "name/taxon collecting"? I'm seriously thinking about removing all the name tags from plants in my garden. So a rather nice snowdrop will just be "Snowdrop" and a rather nice Hellebore with pink spotting will be just that and maybe next to another that just happens to be yellow. Save a fortune on labels and stress as a result of blackbirds chucking labels about.
So what happens if you cross, say, 'Hafod' with 'Moonlight'? I guess the seed parent could always beat the pollen parent or is it that these Eranthis are much more likely to be self-fertile than to be pollinated by a different variety, which is what makes them likely to come true.
I can well understand such frustration, Robert. I think that perhaps the seed reception managers can have trouble in determining when such provenance is reliable so prefer to take a wider "lumping " approach.